The Day

New Connecticu­t law extends applicatio­n deadline for certain young immigrants

Some abused, neglected or abandoned 18- to 20- year-olds can seek special status

- By SUSAN HAIGH

Hartford — Connecticu­t has joined a handful of states in providing particular­ly vulnerable immigrant youth additional time to apply for a federal legal status that could eventually lead to their permanent residency in the U.S.

Under a new law that took effect on July 1, immigrants who are 18, 19 and 20 years old and who’ve been abused, neglected or abandoned, can now ask a state probate court judge to determine if they’re eligible to apply for a federal status known as special immigrant juvenile status.

It’s different from DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which does not provide a path to citizenshi­p in the U.S.

New York, California, Washington and Maryland have passed laws similar to Connecticu­t’s. Meanwhile, New Jersey’s existing statutes have been interprete­d to include the 18-to-20-year-olds, while courts in Massachuse­tts extended the state’s jurisdicti­on.

Before this new change, Connecticu­t’s law applied only to immigrants under age 18, even though the federal government allows people up to age 21 to apply. The gap between the Connecticu­t and federal government age limits was highlighte­d in a Connecticu­t State Supreme Court case involving a teen from Honduras who was unable to apply for the special federal status because of the state’s age restrictio­n.

The discrepanc­y has created problems for other youth and young adults who lack legal status in the U.S. and are seeking protection from deportatio­n.

“We had many conversati­ons with 18- year- olds and 19- year- olds, saying, ‘ We’re so sorry. You’ve reached us too late,’” said Stacey Violante Cote, director of operations at the Center for Children’s Advocacy, which has offices in Hartford, Bridgeport and New Haven. While it’s unclear how many immigrants this new law could impact, she said the children’s legal rights organizati­on fields several calls a week from unaccompan­ied minors who’ve made it to Connecticu­t, often after fleeing serious abuse and neglect. For many of them, Cote said, English is not their primary language, and they haven’t had access to services and support.

One of the center’s recent clients was born in Guatemala, where he had an alcoholic father with a history of family violence. Emotionall­y abused at a very young age and eventually abandoned, Cote said the boy was forced to live under conditions that put him at risk of physical and sexual abuse, malnourish­ment, educationa­l neglect, deplorable living conditions and child labor. He fled to the U.S., where he eventually faced deportatio­n proceed- ings and was referred to the Center for Children’s Advocacy.

While the organizati­on was eventually able to help the boy obtain the required state court order when he was 16 years old, allowing him to then pursue the special immigrant juvenile status, Cote said his then-18- year- old sister was not able to seek the same protection because of her age.

Camila Bortoletto, campaign manager for Connecticu­t Students for a Dream, said the state’s age limitation has been an unnecessar­y barrier for those who’ve faced “extreme and unimaginab­le” obstacles and difficulti­es. She said the youth often don’t have access to basic services, let alone an immigratio­n attorney who knows the system.

“This means that many youth do not find out they qualify for SIJS until they are already over 18 and it is too late to apply under the current process in Connecticu­t,” she told state lawmakers in February .

This marked the second year that advocates pushed for this legislatio­n in the Connecticu­t General Assembly. This time, the bill passed with strong, bipartisan support in both the House of Representa­tives and Senate.

“It shows that state legislatur­es have a role to play and can make immigratio­n policy better, more fair, more inclusive,” said David McGuire, executive director of the Connecticu­t American Civil Liberties Union.

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